Congrats! If you’re reading this, you’re likely one of the people who saw Superman recently. And that is its own reward. You may have even contributed to its blockbuster opening weekend that raked in $122 million in sales. You’re also, like me, probably itching for the next project in James Gunn’s burgeoning cinematic DC Universe. I imagine this isn’t an article you were expecting to pop up here on Horror Press, but stick with me!
There is still a large slate of DC projects on the horizon, ranging from another season of the wildly popular animated series Creature Commandos, to an even more hotly anticipated Clayface film. Directed by James Watkins and penned by Mike Flanagan, James Gunn himself has said that 2026’s Clayface is going to be a rated-R body horror film so impressive that it would blow his work on Slither out of the water.
So, in the spirit of Clayface getting a horror villain glow up, I’d like to discuss other characters that deserve the horror treatment from DC. Because, with a catalogue rich in characters that can be just as frightening as they are colorful, there’s too much genre film potential here to ignore.
Parasite: A Life Stealing Monster Could Call Back to James Gunn’s Slither
As soon as my friend and I left our screening of Superman, a conversation about what villains we’d like to see in the sequel sprang up. Would we get a regular from Supe’s roster, like Braniac or Zod? Or a deep cut like Silver Banshee or Atomic Skull?
There is one potential antagonist I consider the creepiest of his villains: Parasite. A Superman rogue known for his ability to drain the life and powers out of any living being, most will remember him from Superman: The Animated Series. Or, if you’re like my friend, his particularly freaky portrayal by Adam Baldwin in Young Justice.
It was the talk of Parasite that reminded me of the villain in Gunn’s most iconic horror film, Slither. Michael Rooker’s role as Grant Grant, a leech of an abusive husband whose exposure to alien worms turns him into a much more literal leech, was perfectly nasty inside and out. So why not give Parasite that kind of makeover, and give us the most sadistic version of the character yet?
All I ask is for a rude, “Richard Brake in 31”-type to play him, and some Lifeforce style horror where he sucks the energy out of people until they’re withered husks. Combine that with gruesome full-body makeup to replicate his iconic chemical burned purple skin, and you’ve got gold.
Kryb: The Perfect Green Lantern Villain to Spread Fear Across the Cosmos
I have to give Geoff Johns his credit. The Lantern Corps mega-arc that he weaved into his Green Lantern run throughout the late 2000s was pure genius. I suspect with the upcoming Lanterns series on HBO, we’ll probably be meeting quite a few of his iconic characters from those comics. Atrocitus of the Red Lanterns, Larfleeze of the Orange, Saint Walker of the Blue, they’re all on the table.
But one Lantern Corps has fallen far out of the spotlight. That’s their tried-and-true nemeses: the original “Lanterns but a different color”, The Sinestro Corps. These Yellow Lanterns are supposed to be all about fear, but most writers and artists have lost sight of actually making them terrifying. If the upcoming HBO show Lanterns really does end up evoking the vibes of True Detective as its showrunners have teased, I think they should lean into that inspiration.
The one member that deserves a live action horror portrayal more than any other in this vein is Kryb. An alien witch who steals the children of her victims and keeps them in an organic cage growing out of her back, she feeds off their fear and cries for help. It doesn’t hurt that she already looks like a nightmare creature Javier Botet would portray.
Personally, I would love a massive, grotesque animatronic for Kryb blended with CGI (ala Smile 2’s Entity). She’s a fun route to take when it comes to striking fear in the hearts of Green Lanterns—and the audience.
Scarecrow: I’m Begging For Someone To Please Make Him Frightening Again
I know, I know, obvious pick. “The guy who has fear powers could be scary? How’d you come up with that one?”. But if you’re a Batman comics fan, you know that since around the time of Scott Snyder’s industry defining run on Batman, Scarecrow has been mostly relegated to a bit player on Gotham’s stage. This regrettably happens even in the storylines that should focus on him. I would even argue that his fear gas has become more iconic than he is, but it’s time to change that.
I point towards the platonic ideal of Scarecrows as a way to get him back on track: Jeffrey Combs in season 4 of Batman: The Animated Series. What I wouldn’t give to see Combs voice the character again as he terrorizes Arkham Asylum’s patients and tortures them with their worst fears. Especially with the decayed “hanged man” look that DCAU visionary Bruce Timm penned him in during season 4!
Whether it’s an animated film or a live action, a creative like Scott Derrickson is my pick to handle the character. I want to see a dark director’s vision as Dr. Johnathan Crane drives his “patients” completely mad and makes their nightmares feel real.
Etrigan the Demon: Jack Kirby’s Horror Fantasy Creation Needs an A24 Slant
If you know me in real life, I want to thank you now for letting me rave about how much I love Jack Kirby all the time. Of all his creations, one is so Kirby-esque and so perfect for an overhaul that I knew he had to be on this list from the jump: Etrigan, AKA The Demon.
Etrigan is usually an antihero in the vein of Venom, bound to his unwilling human host Jason Blood. But his stories could be taken in any number of directions, including ones before he was trapped in Blood by Merlin. (Yes, the wizard Merlin, that one.) Obviously, the direction that appeals to me most is making this hulking demon genuinely scary.
Now, a yellow demon that tends to rhyme when he speaks… I admit, on face value, it’s a hard sell. But this is the genre of Wishmaster, people, it’s the genre of Phantasm and Demon Knight! Reviewed that last one by the way, read it here.
There is a long legacy of somewhat silly horror villains who still manage to be thoroughly entertaining and even intimidating. What I would love to see is some bleak fantasy horror set dressing to accompany Etrigan; heavy inspirations from The Green Knight and The VVitch seem like a wise angle to take. It would be great to see Etrigan become a looming force that haunts its enemies as they try and find a way out, only to see death coming closer and closer.
Killer Croc: A Gotham Legend Is a Candyman-esque Villain in Waiting
In the modern vernacular, Killer Croc is a jobber. Which is a shame, because there is a lot of potential for his story that gets squandered when he’s just here to punch and be punched. While his rare mutation gave him all the powers that could have made him a hero, it also gave him the monstrous appearance of a crocodile-human hybrid. He is a character damned from birth. And ultimately, he’s a reflection of Gotham’s social inequity that condemns its citizens’ lives to the gutter.
Outcast and scorned, he became a fixture of Gotham, a boogeyman living in the sewers, and a name everyone in the city fears. In a meta-context, Croc has bounced around from series to series, mainly serving as a big man for any member of the Bat Family to knock down. And that’s fine, I guess, but he could be so much better.
My favorite Killer Croc story comes from J.H. Williams legendary (and criminally cut short) Batwoman run. In it, Croc becomes a minion of Medusa, who uses her mythological magic to make him grow larger and more monstrous the more he’s feared. A horror film with an emphasis on Croc becoming a Candyman-esque legend in Gotham over the years is what I’d like to see. Watching him grow in power as an urban legend over the years, and focusing on the kind of people who would worship and feed him new victims. The chance to actually dissect Killer Croc and make him a complicated monster screams of high potential to bring people to theaters.
Anton Arcane: A Rotten Re-Animator for All Seasons
One of the biggest casualties of the former DC Cinematic Universe’s mismanagement was the superhero horror show Swamp Thing. Due to disagreements between DC and Warner Media, and a snafu involving a promised $40 million tax rebate for shooting in North Carolina, the show was soft cancelled before it was even out of production. It was then hard cancelled a day before its second episode premiered.
Numerous fans called to save the series, but none of the requests to #SaveTheSwampThing were successful. Still, they proved there is still a serious desire to see a horror-oriented Swamp Thing property, if not on streaming than on the big screen.
As much as I love the fully practical work-up they did with actor Kevin Durand for his character Jason Woodrue, there’s one villain I really need to see in live action: Anton Arcane. Whereas Swamp Thing is a “monster” with more humanity than he can sometimes handle, Arcane is the opposite. A human monster with a knack for necromancy, consumed with a desire for corrupting power and immortality. Arcane has persisted as Swamp Thing’s archnemesis for decades for a reason.
Played in the vein of Herbert West, Arcane could be an iconic horror villain in his own right. That doesn’t even account for his Un-Men, undead flesh golems that would feel right at home in Carpenter’s The Thing. The creepy, deformed, and mismatched servants of Arcane provide plenty of opportunities for us to watch undead monstrosities do his dirty work.
Professor Pyg: A Batman Slasher with His Own Iconic Minions
Matt Reeve’s The Batman really set the standard for The Riddler going forward: less demented gameshow host, more John Doe from Seven. Speculation on sequels has shown that there’s a strong desire to see Batman’s more horror themed villains. Enter Professor Pyg.
If you played the videogame Batman: Arkham Knight, you already know him. A scientist of dubious academic standing, this surgeon has permanently fallen to madness. Wearing a chubby cheeked pig mask in and out of his experiments, he was a mainstay of Grant Morrison’s seminal run on Batman and Robin in 2009. Greasy, gag-inducing, and all around off-putting with his scalpels and saws, Pyg is basically already a slasher villain.
But it’s those experiments which serve the most obvious reason as to why we need to see him. He’s best known for creating the Dollotrons, something the game toned down: in the comics, he captures men and women alike and grafts babydoll-esque flesh masks onto their faces to turn them into bubble-headed and brainwashed psychotics.
The Penguin miniseries on HBO was a fun character study of an incredibly messed up character with Oz Cobb. It proved introspection on how these rogues get made can be captivating. But beyond the partially stable villains, I would love to see more of the parts of Gotham that are deeper in the shadows than ever, following the Riddler’s attack. That means showing us the monsters like Pyg that wash up out of the outer darkness when it was flooded. The ones who are too far gone for any sort of normal life.
Animal Man: The Body Horror Superhero We’ve Been Waiting For
My final proposal here is probably the most likely one we’ll get with James Gunn’s new DCU. Knowing the comic book characters Gunn is a fan of, I would not be surprised at all if we got an Animal Man show or movie at some point. He even commented in a recent interview with Seth Meyers that whoever he casts to play Animal Man has to be downright great.
If and when we do get the right actor, we’ll likely get something I and a lot of other horror comics fans have been clamoring for: a true, live action body horror superhero. I am of course talking about an adaptation of the New 52 miniseries, Animal Man: The Hunt. This loose requel to Animal Man, a series made famous by Grant Morrison back in the late 80s and early 90s, was arguably the best project to come out of the New 52 rebrand.
It was chock full of incredible and sometimes revolting art by comics luminary Travel Foreman, who painstakingly penned each panel in his unmistakable (and very bloody) style. The series made for an incredibly interesting dive into the mythos of where the titular hero gets his powers from, courtesy of modern comics legend Jeff Lemire.
When it comes down to who does it, I’d love Alex Garland to take a crack at adapting The Hunt. His work in Annihilation more than proves he can do justice to the trippy narrative. Whether its dealing with eldritch abominations from The Rot, the dimension of flesh and blood that is The Red, or the bone-snapping, gut-rending transformations Animal Man has to go through as he fights to save the life of his daughter Maxine, I trust him to deliver.
Or am I really just waiting and hoping for another moment like the bear scene from Annihilation? If I was, could you blame me?